Home Site Map Make Your Home Page Suggestions Enquiry Advertise With Us
Sunday, November 22, 2009  
 
 
News Home
Video News
Press Releases
Features
Events
Special Articles
   
  News Updated on Sunday, November 22, 2009 4:35:11 PM
» India » Asia » World » Sports » Business » Sci-Tec » Health » Entertainment » Have your say » Picture Gallery
 
 Business

India has a seat at table of global influence: US official
Washington |Saturday, 2009 1:05:05 PM IST
 

With new players like India and Brazil taking a seat at the table of global influence, the international system that emerged at the end of World War-II is being transformed, according to the top US intelligence official.

"We have some new players - Brazil and India - that now have a seat at the table of global influence," Director of National Intelligence Dennis C. Blair, who serves as the head of 16 top US intelligence agencies, said Friday.

"The roles of Russia and China have also changed considerably. And there are new stakes and new rules for everybody," he said speaking at the World Affairs Council of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Blair recalled that the National Intelligence Council (NIC) had last year, in a set of long-range projections entitled "Global Trends 2025: A Transformed World", projected that "the international system that we've known since the end of World War II is being transformed".

A year later, Blair said: "The G-8 has decidedly become the G-20. You notice who just got the 2016 Summer Olympics? Rio de Janeiro. And which movie won the Academy Award for Best Picture in February? 'Slumdog Millionaire', a film about transcending poverty in Mumbai."

A second major projection made by NIC was that a total breakdown of the current system is unlikely, but the transition to a new global, multipolar system won't always be smooth, he said.

"There's also going to be an unprecedented transfer of relative wealth moving from West to East," he predicted.

"It's already under way, and it's going to continue in that direction for the foreseeable future.

"Many emerging market countries such as China, India and Brazil have weathered the global financial recession better than the industrialised democracies - they've actually experienced faster recoveries.

"Many economists expect that trend to continue. But Russia has lost ground economically. The recession also undercuts efforts to reduce poverty in the world's poorest nations," he said.

The third takeaway from Global Trends 2025 was that even though things will be rocky for some countries in the short term, there's going to be greater global prosperity in the long term, Blair said.

"Unfortunately, there will still be a wide array of transnational challenges like energy security, resource scarcities, climate change, proliferation and terrorism," the top intelligence official said.

The fourth takeaway from the report was that the potential for conflict - both between nations and within nations - is likely to grow, not shrink, he said.

"It's still too early to tell whether this forecast will be fully realised or, more importantly, can be stopped," Blair said. "What I can say is that the risks of greater or endemic conflict - especially in the Middle East and South Asia - haven't lessened over the past year.

"When you combine this with such a diverse range of threats - including terrorism, drugs and crime - it makes it difficult to see any lessening of the security challenges for the US and our allies," Blair said.

"And the fifth major prediction was that in 2025, the US will remain the world's single most powerful actor. But our influence and leverage will become more constrained - relative to increasingly influential actors elsewhere," the official said, suggesting the forecasts the NIC and others made a year ago seem to be holding up.

ak/mv/mr

( 558 Words)

2009-11-07-11:44:08 (IANS)

  Viewer's Comment
Comments Not Available
 
 More Stories

Ma to meet Zhong and Li against Ding to meet in Asian singles final 

IBAI summit tomorrow 

Four women drown in river 

2 killed, 18 injured as bus plunges into rivulet 

Oldest cyber savvy Rosakutty dead 

Fifteen, including five women injured in group clash 

PHRC member unsatisfied with condition of jails in Punjab 

BJP to hold statewide stir on Nov 28 


Print this Page
Printer Friendly Version
E-Mail this page to a Friend
Send This page to A Friend

Search Archives :  



Quick Links - Webindia123.com
Services
Hobbies
Entertainment
Classifieds
Career / Education
UK, USA, Canada
Utilities
E-Booking
India Reference
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
IndianStates
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
Pradesh

Copyright 2000-2009 Suni Systems (P) Ltd.
All rights reserved